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World Wide May 10, 2026

Rebel Fighters Kill at Least 69 in Northeastern DRC

Armed rebels from the CODECO militia killed at least 69 people in Ituri province on April 28, 2026,…
Armed rebels from the CODECO militia killed at least 69 people in a series of attacks on villages in Ituri province, northeastern DRC, on April 28, 2026, reigniting long‑standing ethnic violence between the Lendu and Hema communities.Deadly CODECO Assault Leaves 69 Dead in IturiThe coordinated raids targeted several villages, including Bassa, after an earlier assault by the CRP (Convention for the Popular Revolution) on FARDC positions near Pimbo. CODECO fighters, claiming to protect the Lendu, launched retaliatory attacks that left civilian casualties and delayed body recovery for days.Attack date: April 28, 2026Location: villages in Ituri province, near the Uganda and South Sudan bordersPerpetrators: CODECO militia (Lendu‑aligned) and earlier CRP assault (Hema‑aligned)Casualty Figures and Militant InvolvementSecurity sources confirmed a death toll of at least 69, including 19 militia members and soldiers. Civil society leader Dieudonne Losa reported that only 25 bodies have been buried, with many remains still unrecovered.Total deaths: 69Militia/soldier deaths: 19Unburied bodies: > 40Escalating Ethnic Tensions and Regional InstabilityThe violence reflects the deep‑rooted rivalry between the Hema and Lendu ethnic groups, a conflict that has persisted for decades over control of Ituri’s gold and other mineral resources. The presence of multiple armed actors—CODECO, CRP, the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF), and the M23 rebellion—stretches the Congolese army (FARDC) and the UN peacekeeping mission (MONUSCO) thinly across the region.Humanitarian agencies warn that the massacre could trigger cycles of retaliation, further displacing civilians and hampering aid delivery.Outlook: Risks of Wider Violence and Humanitarian CrisisExperts, including Amnesty International’s Rawya Rageh, argue that without a decisive security response, eastern DRC will see “more attacks” as armed groups exploit security gaps. The UN has condemned the killings and pledged to protect civilians, but limited troop numbers raise doubts about effective enforcement.Potential developments include:Retaliatory attacks by Hema‑aligned groups against Lendu communitiesIncreased recruitment of child soldiers by groups such as ADF and CODECOEscalated international pressure for a coordinated regional security frameworkContinued instability threatens the extraction of critical minerals—cobalt, copper, uranium—that feed global supply chains, making the conflict a matter of both regional security and worldwide economic interest.
#CODECO #CRP #Ituri
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Tech May 07, 2026

Barry Diller on Trust and AGI: 'Trust is Irrelevant' as AI Nears

Billionaire media mogul Barry Diller expresses trust in OpenAI CEO Sam Altman but emphasizes that t…
The Diller-Altman Trust Dynamic Billionaire media mogul Barry Diller doesn’t think OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is untrustworthy, despite recent reporting to the contrary. Onstage at The Wall Street Journal’s “Future of Everything” conference this week, Diller vouched for the AI exec, who has been accused by some former colleagues and board members of being manipulative and deceptive at times. The AGI Conundrum Diller, who is friendly with Altman, was responding to a question about whether or not people should put their faith in Altman to ensure that artificial intelligence benefits humanity. In particular, he was asked about the theoretical form of AI known as artificial general intelligence, or AGI, which could one day outperform humans on any task. The Limits of Trust in AI Development The media exec, a co-founder of Fox Broadcasting and chairman of IAC and Expedia Group, said that while he believes Altman is sincere in his pursuits, that’s not really the area of concern people should be focused on. Rather, it’s the unknown consequences that will result from AI. “One of the big issues with AI is it goes way beyond trust,” Diller said. “It may be that trust is irrelevant because the things that are happening are a surprise to the people who are making those things happen.” The Unknowns of AI Progress Diller added that the development of AI is a journey into the unknown, with even those creating it unsure of the outcomes. He emphasized that progress in AI is inevitable and that the focus should be on preparing for its consequences. “We have embarked on something that is going to change almost everything. It is not under-reported. Now, whether these huge investments are going to come through — I couldn’t care less. I’m not invested in it, but progress is going to be made,” The Need for Guardrails Diller also highlighted the importance of establishing guardrails for AI development to prevent unforeseen negative consequences. He warned that if humans don’t think about guardrails, then the alternative is that “another force, an AGI force, will do it themselves. And once that happens, once you unleash that, there’s no going back.”
#Barry Diller #Sam Altman #OpenAI
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Tech May 06, 2026

Ethos Raises $22.75M Series A to Transform Expert Networks with Voice Onboarding

London‑based startup Ethos closed a $22.75 million Series A led by a16z, using AI‑driven voice onbo…
Ethos, a London‑based AI startup, announced a $22.75 million Series A led by a16z on May 6 2026. The round, also backed by General Catalyst, XTX Markets, Evantic Capital, and Common Magic, will accelerate the company’s voice‑powered onboarding system that aims to deliver higher‑quality expert matches for corporate clients. Voice‑Powered Onboarding Redefines Expert Matching Ethos replaces the traditional form‑filled, title‑based profiling used by platforms like LinkedIn, GLG, and AlphaSights with a conversational interview. Experts answer curated questions via voice, allowing the platform to capture nuanced sub‑specializations and real‑world experience that job titles miss. Experts can be queried on complex criteria, e.g., “find people who worked at a funded startup backed by A‑grade investors solving finance automation.” Clients such as hedge funds, private‑equity firms, AI labs, and consulting groups can search across public data (blogs, papers) and voice‑derived insights. Ethos reports roughly 35,000 new experts joining each week, building a deep, searchable talent graph. Funding Round and Valuation Signals The Series A injects $22.75 million into Ethos, bringing its team to eight full‑time members while it scales its data pipeline. Lead investor: a16z (Anish Acharya highlighted voice as “the original form of human communication”). Participating investors: General Catalyst, XTX Markets, Evantic Capital, Common Magic. Revenue model: 30%+ per‑project fee; the company is on track for an eight‑figure annualized revenue run‑rate. Strategic Implications for the Expert‑Network Landscape By capturing richer signals, Ethos challenges legacy platforms that rely on shallow job‑title data. The voice interview approach creates a more granular knowledge graph, aligning with AI labs that are mapping every economically valuable occupation. Potential to attract AI‑driven professional services in law, health, finance, and management. Competitive edge over conversational‑AI interview tools like Listen Labs and Outset, which focus on interview automation rather than expert network depth. Provides a data moat as public sources (blogs, academic papers) are combined with proprietary voice‑derived insights. Growth Trajectory and Market Outlook Ethos aims to keep its core team compact while scaling its expert pool and client base. The influx of capital will support: Expansion of voice‑capture infrastructure and AI matching algorithms. Targeted outreach to high‑value corporate clients and AI research labs. Further integration of external data sources to enrich expert profiles. Analysts expect the voice‑first model to set a new standard for expert networks, especially as enterprises demand more precise skill‑based matches. If Ethos sustains its weekly onboarding rate, the platform could reach a critical mass that forces incumbents to adopt similar AI‑driven profiling methods.
#Ethos #a16z #James Lo
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Politics May 02, 2026

Zambia Pulls Plug on RightsCon 2026, Citing ‘National Values’

Zambia’s government abruptly cancelled the RightsCon 2026 summit, the world’s largest gathering on …
Zambia announced on 5 May 2026 that the RightsCon summit, the world’s largest conference on human rights and technology, would be cancelled just days before its scheduled start, citing a need to align the event with “national values”.Government’s Last-Minute Cancellation of RightsCon 2026Permanent Secretary Thabo Kawana of the Ministry of Information & Media said the decision was taken to ensure the gathering “aligns with Zambia’s national values, policy priorities, and broader public interest considerations”. The summit was to run from 5‑8 May in Lusaka, attracting over 2,600 activists, technologists, academics and policymakers.Financial and Logistical Fallout for DelegatesMore than 2,600 participants had already booked travel and accommodation.Individual delegates, such as Karna Kone from Côte d’Ivoire, reported losses of several hundred dollars in airfare and visa fees.Organiser Access Now had invested months of liaison and incurred undisclosed costs.Implications for Zambia’s International Reputation and Civil Society SpaceHuman‑rights lawyers like Linda Kasonde argue the move signals a “slow degradation of rights” and damages Zambia’s image, especially as the country was set to host the first RightsCon in southern Africa. Reports suggest pressure from China—including the use of a venue donated by Beijing and concerns over Taiwanese delegates—may have influenced the decision.The cancellation arrives ahead of the August 2026 general election, raising fears that the government is tightening control over public discourse and limiting civil‑society convening.What This Means for Future Digital‑Rights Conferences in AfricaStakeholders warn that the incident could deter future international events, as sponsors and participants may view African venues as politically volatile. Advocacy groups are calling for stronger guarantees of independence for such summits, and for regional bodies to develop protocols that protect civil‑society gatherings from abrupt governmental interference.
#Zambia #RightsCon #Access Now
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Economy May 02, 2026

Britain’s Golden Retirement Era Faces Its End as Pensions Shift

Britain’s post‑war model of a comfortable retirement, built on universal state pensions and generou…
The End of Britain’s Comfortable Retirement DreamBritain’s long‑standing model of a secure, leisure‑filled retirement – built on state pensions, generous occupational schemes and rising life expectancy – is now under pressure as demographic, economic and policy shifts threaten the “golden age” of retirement.From Post‑War Pension Prosperity to Modern AusterityAfter World II, the universal state pension introduced by the Attlee government, expanding occupational pensions and booming home‑ownership created a generation of retirees who could enjoy early retirement, travel and lifelong learning. The 1960s‑80s saw the rise of package holidays, the Open University and the University of the Third Age, while full employment and a free NHS underpinned rising healthy life expectancy.Numbers That Reveal a Changing Landscape1909: Britain introduced an old‑age pension for the poorest, age 70.2003: For the first time, the proportion of pensioners in relative poverty fell below the national average.2007‑08: Global financial crisis caused pension fund values to plunge, exposing the risk of private‑pension reliance.2020s: Defined‑contribution schemes now dominate, with many younger workers facing pension pots that are “nowhere near enough” for a comfortable retirement.Why the Retirement Contract Is FracturingThe shift from defined‑benefit to defined‑contribution schemes, combined with stagnant wages, high housing costs and rising student debt, has turned retirement into a contested political issue. Baby‑boomers are portrayed as a “selfish” generation in works such as David Willetts’s The Pinch, while Generation X faces lower pension entitlements and a likely decline in pensioner incomes as they enter the labour market.Advocacy groups like Age UK and the National Pensioners Convention have kept older‑people’s rights on the agenda, but inter‑generational tensions are deepening, especially after Brexit and the Covid‑19 pandemic.What the Next Decade May Hold for British RetireesResearch from the Social Market Foundation suggests that retirees of the 2030s will have smaller pension pots than the boomers, relying more on housing wealth. Without substantial policy reform, many will need to work into their 60s or 70s, or turn to the “FIRE” (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement. Future reforms will need to blend work, care, learning and leisure, and leverage technology to sustain living standards without compromising the planet.
#UK pensions #Age UK #Generation X
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Business May 02, 2026

Wrexham AFC Used Taxpayer Funds for Pitch Upgrades Not Mentioned in Initial Grant

Wrexham AFC, part-owned by Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, used taxpayer funds to upgrade its pitch with…
The Controversy Over Wrexham AFC's Pitch Upgrades Wrexham AFC, the football club part-owned by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac, used taxpayer funds to re-lay its pitch, even though initial grant documents assessing the state investment did not make reference to it. The Grant and Pitch Upgrade Details The club has been awarded £18m in grants, with the first £3.8m tranche in February 2022. However, legally required state aid documents relating to that initial grant made no reference to the pitch works. The club spent £1.7m upgrading the pitch last summer with undersoil heating, new drainage, and stitching with plastic fibres. A month later, on 17 September 2025, the council signed a contract that detailed how the club could use the full £18m – including pitch works that had already been completed. The Financial Impact Analysis The retrospective addition of the pitch works to the 2025 grant funding agreement suggests Wrexham AFC was given unusual leeway in deciding how to spend taxpayer money for its own benefit, without legally binding controls in place. By 2025, Reynolds and Mac had led promotion to the lucrative Championship, and had attracted large sponsorship deals and millions of pounds of new investment from the US billionaire Allyn family. Shortly after the grant, the private equity group Apollo also invested millions. The Impact on Football Finance Stefan Borson, a football finance expert, questioned why the council had pushed ahead with the rest of the grant in 2025, given the significant change in the club’s financial circumstances. “During summer 2025, the club spent £2m improving its pitch, presumably with a view to helping its players achieve a sporting advantage,” Borson said. “The fact that the grant funding agreement was not entered into in 2022 means that the change in financial status of the club could have led to a rethink as to the scale of the grant commitment.” The Future Outlook The controversy raises questions about the use of taxpayer funds for private benefit and the need for stricter controls on grant funding for football clubs.
#Wrexham AFC #Ryan Reynolds #Rob Mac
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Sports May 02, 2026

Bueno’s Late Equaliser Helps Wolves Salvage Point After Ballard’s Hair‑Pull Red Card

Sunderland led 1‑0 through Nordi Mukiele before Dan Ballard was dismissed for pulling Tolu Arokodar…
Sunderland’s 17‑minute lead was wiped out after centre‑back Dan Ballard was sent off for pulling the long braids of Wolves forward Tolu Arokodare, allowing Santiago Bueno to head the equaliser and secure a 1‑1 draw at Molineux.Red Card for Dan Ballard After Hair‑Pull IncidentReferee Paul Tierney showed Ballard a straight red in the 24th minute following a VAR check that confirmed the hair‑pull offence. The dismissal forced Sunderland to play the majority of the match with ten men, shifting the tactical balance in Wolves’ favour.Match Stats Highlight the 1‑1 Draw and Goal Timeline17' – Nordi Mukiele (Sunderland) scores with a header.24' – Dan Ballard receives a red card for hair pulling.54' – Santiago Bueno (Wolves) equalises with a header.Final score: Wolves 1–1 Sunderland.Both teams created additional chances but failed to find a winner.Implications for Sunderland’s European Hopes and Wolves’ Survival FightThe draw leaves Sunderland in 12th place, jeopardising their push for a European spot, while Wolves, languishing at the bottom of the Premier League, gain a crucial point that keeps their relegation battle alive.What the Result Means for the Remainder of the SeasonWith the season entering its final third, Sunderland must regroup and secure points against direct rivals to stay in contention, whereas Wolves will look to build on the momentum from this comeback to climb out of the drop zone.
#Sunderland AFC #Wolverhampton Wanderers #Dan Ballard
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Sports May 02, 2026

Arsenal Dominates Fulham 3-0 with Saka's Return Inspiring First-Half Performance

Arsenal secured a commanding 3-0 lead over Fulham at halftime, with Bukayo Saka's return to the sta…
The Lead: Arsenal's Commanding First-Half Display Arsenal established a commanding 3-0 lead over Fulham at halftime in their Premier League encounter, with Bukayo Saka's return to the starting lineup proving to be a game-changing decision. The Gunners' performance was characterized by fluid attacking play and clinical finishing, putting them in a strong position to secure all three points and maintain their lead at the top of the Premier League table. Saka's Impact: The Return of a Key Player Bukayo Saka's return to the starting XI had an immediate and positive impact on Arsenal's performance. The English winger, who had been sidelined recently, looked as vibrant as he has all season and played a crucial role in both of Arsenal's first-half goals. Saka's presence provided width and creativity on the right flank, causing constant problems for Fulham's defense. Goal Analysis: Clinical Finishing from Arsenal Arsenal's first-half goals came from two different sources, showcasing the team's attacking versatility: Saka's Goal (40th minute): A well-taken strike that demonstrated his clinical finishing ability after good build-up play. Gyokeres' Brace (45th and 45+4 minutes): Two goals from the forward, including a fine header, with Saka providing the assist for the first of these goals. The third goal, initially credited to Calafiori, was disallowed after a VAR check confirmed it was offside, highlighting the importance of technology in modern football decision-making. Premier League Title Race Implications With this victory, Arsenal solidified their position at the top of the Premier League table with 76 points from 35 games. Their lead over Manchester City, who have played two fewer games, is 6 points, giving them a significant advantage in the title race. The positive goal difference of +41 also provides a cushion that could prove crucial in the final stages of the season. Second Half Outlook With a comfortable 3-0 lead at halftime, Arsenal has the opportunity to further enhance their goal difference in the second half while potentially resting key players ahead of upcoming fixtures. Fulham, on the other hand, will need to regroup and find a way to breach Arsenal's defense if they are to salvage any pride from this match.
#Arsenal #Fulham #Bukayo Saka
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World Wide May 02, 2026

Israeli Air Strikes in Lebanon Kill 41 in 24 Hours

Israeli air strikes across southern Lebanon have killed at least 41 people in 24 hours, with Lebano…
The Escalating Conflict in Lebanon Israel has launched multiple strikes across southern Lebanon, resulting in the deaths of at least 41 people in 24 hours. Lebanon's Ministry of Health reported that the overall death toll since March 2 has risen to 2,659, with 8,183 injured. Details of the Recent Attacks The latest wave of attacks targeted several towns and villages in southern Lebanon. Three people were killed in an Israeli attack on the town of Shoukine in Nabatieh district. An earlier attack on a car in the village of Kfar Dajjal killed two people, while three others were killed when a home was hit in the village of Lwaizeh. A strike on the village of Shoukin killed two people. The Humanitarian Crisis More than one million people in Lebanon have been registered as displaced since the outbreak of the war. The conflict has led to a significant humanitarian crisis, with many civilians caught in the crossfire. Hezbollah's Response Despite the rising death toll, Hezbollah has pledged to continue attacks on Israeli forces inside Lebanese territory. The group has recently been using small drones controlled by fibre-optic cables to hit Israeli tanks, resulting in the deaths of three Israeli soldiers. The Future Outlook The ceasefire declared on April 17 has failed to hold, with both sides continuing to engage in hostilities. China's envoy to the United Nations has called on Israel to stop its bombardment of Lebanon, while Israel's Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is facing intense pressure to abandon the ceasefire.
#Israel #Lebanon #Hezbollah
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